As the virulently anti-Islam, anti-immigration Dutch politician Geert Wilders sought re-election in Wednesday’s (September 12) polling in the Netherlands, light has been thrown on the links of his less than transparent parliamentary party.

A detailed article has pointed out, “Wilder’s Party is self-funded”, thus absolving the need to disclose donors, as is mandatory for the main-stream, government funded parties.

Wilders, who joined the Dutch Parliament in 2006, having campaigned from an anti-Islam platform, had a 24 member Party in the 150 seat lower house; however, he lost eleven in yesterday’s poll. His MPs stand against mosque construction, headscarves and non-Western immigration. Tolerance and outreach is a distant planet, with Wilders having declared he would not enter a mosque: “… in a hundred thousand years.”

Anders Breivik, who killed 77 people in Norway in July of 2011 and was sentenced in August 2012 to an initial 21 years in jail, quoted Wilders in“an online manifesto that sought to justify his crimes”, the article reminds.

It transpires that in a legal case brought against Wilders in 2010, regarding his film “Fitna” (broadly translated as upheaval, chaos, creating discord) “which interlays images of terrorist attacks with quotations from the Qu’ran”, legal fees were paid by The Middle East Forum, a US based “pro-Israeli think tank.”

The Middle East Forum was founded in1990, by Daniel Pipes “to promote American interests in the Middle East.” The Forum views the region as of “radical ideologies …violence and weapons of mass destruction as a major source of problems for the United States …” (Emphasis mine.) Ironically only Israel is proven to have weapons of mass destruction and in seemingly copious quantities.

The Middle East Forum aims to protect the “freedom of speech of anti-Muslim authors promoting American interests in the Middle East” and, of course, protect it “… from Middle East threats.”

“Islam is the Trojan Horse in Europe. If we do not stop Islamification , ‘Eurabia’ and ‘Netherabia” will just be a matter of time”, Wilders told the Netherlands Parliament.

Another supporter of Wilders is Los Angeles based David Horowitz, whose organization is the David Horowitz Freedom Centre (“freedom” is surely becoming the word from Hell) “dedicated to the defense of free societies whose moral, cultural and economic foundations are under attack by leftist and Islamic enemies at home and abroad.” Horowitz has also founded an Israeli Security Project.

“Horowitz agreed with the Dutchman’s repeated and public comparison of the Qu’ran with Hitler’s Menin Kampf”, regarding comparing the two works as a “fair analogy.”

Pamela Geller who runs Stop Islamization of America is also cited as a supporter, though denies she gives Wilders any funding.

Described as deprived of a personal life as a result of his hatred of Islam, with no privacy and 24 hour guards (paid for by the Dutch tax payer) Wilders states that nowhere has he had “that special feeling of solidarity that I always get when I arrive at Ben Gurion International Airport”, which he records he has arrived at 40 times in the last 25 years.

This solidarity has led him to call for Jordan to be renamed Palestine and for Palestinians to return there and for the Dutch government to refer to Jordan as Palestine and move their Embassy in Amman to Jerusalem. Further, he has stated:

If Jerusalem falls into the hands of the Muslims, Athens and Rome will be next. Thus, Jerusalem is the main front protecting the West. It is not a conflict over territory but rather an ideological battle, between the mentality of the liberated West and the ideology of Islamic barbarism.

Daniel Pipes et al., it seems, cast a long shadow. As Max Blumenthal has written, although the identity of “Sam Bacile”, seemingly creator of the filth-ridden anti-Muslim “film” which may have contributed to the death of US Ambassador Chris Stevens, with three colleagues and ten Libyan security detail in Benghazi on September 11, a “consultant” to the project is known.

Publicly listed as a consultant on the film, he is “a known anti-Muslim activist with ties to the extreme Christian right and the militia movement. He is Steve Klein, a Hemet, California-based insurance salesman who claims to have led a ‘hunter-killer team’ in Vietnam.”

Klein is a right-wing extremist who emerged from (the mindset) that produced Anders Behring Breivik and which takes inspiration from the writings of Robert Spencer, Pamela Geller, and Daniel Pipes.

Pipes has also virulently denied having had any influence in the publishing of the “cartoons” of the Prophet Muhammad in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten. However, he confirms on his website that an Editor responsible for their commission, Flemming Rose, interviewed him in Philadelphia on October 25, 2004. The result was an article, “The Threat of Islam” in the Jyllands-Posten on October 29. The 12 cartoons appeared late in 2005.

They resulted in the burning of the Danish Embassy in Pakistan, the setting fire to the Danish Embassies in Syria, Lebanon, and Iran, an estimated over 100 deaths, stormings of European buildings and burnings of European flags. Denmark’s Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen declared it Denmark’s worst international crisis since the Second World War.

President Obama, after the death of Ambassador Stevens and colleagues (the ten Libyan staff seemingly passed him by) stated that he rejects denigration of religious belief. Perhaps a place to start denigration’s halt would be the home-grown in the Western crusading, fundamentalist Christian-Zionist alliance. From Wilders to Pipes.

Felicity Arbuthnot is a journalist with special knowledge of Iraq. Author, with Nikki van der Gaag, of Baghdad in the Great City series for World Almanac books, she has also been Senior Researcher for two Award winning documentaries on Iraq, John Pilger's Paying the Price: Killing the Children of Iraq and Denis Halliday Returns for RTE (Ireland.) Read other articles by Felicity.

This article was posted on Friday, September 14th, 2012 at 12:09am and is filed under Denmark, Racism, Religion.